Planned Violence: Post/Colonial Urban Infrastructure, Literature and Culture
Editat de Elleke Boehmer, Dominic Daviesen Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 dec 2019
This
book
brings
the
insights
of
social
geographers
and
cultural
historians
into
a
critical
dialogue
with
literary
narratives
of
urban
culture
and
theories
of
literary
cultural
production.
In
so
doing,
it
explores
new
ways
of
conceptualizing
the
relationship
between
urban
planning,
its
often
violent
effects,
and
literature.
Comparing
the
spatial
pasts
and
presents
of
the
post-imperial
and
post/colonial
cities
of
London,
Delhi
and
Johannesburg,
but
also
including
case
studies
of
other
cities,
such
as
Chicago,
Belfast,
Jerusalem
and
Mumbai,Planned
Violenceinvestigates
how
that
iconic
site
of
modernity,
the
colonial
city,
was
imagined
by
its
planners
—
and
how
this
urban
imagination,
and
the
cultural
and
social
interventions
that
arose
in
response
to
it,
made
violence
a
part
of
the
everyday
social
life
of
its
subjects.
Throughout,
however,
the
collection
also
explores
the
extent
to
which
literary
and
cultural
productions
might
actively
resist
infrastructures
of
planned
violence,
and
imagine
alternative
ways
of
inhabiting
post/colonial
city
spaces.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9783030404031
ISBN-10: 303040403X
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2018
Editura: Springer
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland
ISBN-10: 303040403X
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2018
Editura: Springer
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland
Cuprins
1
Planned
Violence:
Post/Colonial
Urban
Infrastructures,
Literature
and
Culture
Elleke
Boehmer
and
Dominic
Davies
Section
I
Planned/Unplanned
Cities
.-
2
White
Cities,
Black
Streets:
Planned
Violence
and
Native
Maps
in
Richard
Wright’s
Chicago
and
Modikwe
Dikobe’s
Johannesburg
Loren
Kruger.-
3
Grey
Space,
Tahrir
Laser:
Conspiracy,
Critique
and
the
Urban
in
Julie
Mehretu’s
Depictions
of
Revolutionary
Cairo
Nicholas
Simcik
Arese.-
4
Thames
Valley
Royal
(or,
Maxwell
in
Oxford):
The
Story
of
a
Football
Club
and
the
History
of
a
City
William
Ghosh.-
5
Slums
and
the
Postcolonial
Uncanny
Ankhi
Mukherjee.-
6
The
Not-so-Quiet
Violence
of
Bricks
and
Mortar
Zen
Marie.-
7
Intervention
I.
What
You
Find
in
the
River:
Isolarion
Ten
Years
On
James
Attlee
Section
II
Forensic
Infrastructures
.-
8
The
Intimacy
of
Infrastructure:
Vulnerability
and
Abjection
in
Palestinian
Jerusalem
Hanna
Baumann.-
9
Sound
Systems
and
Other
Systems:
The
Policing
of
Urban
Aesthetic
Spaces
in
the
Poetry
of
Linton
Kwesi
Johnson
Louisa
Olufsen
Layne
10
‘Throwing
Petrol
on
the
Fire’:
Writing
in
the
Shadow
of
the
Belfast
Urban
Motorway
Stephen
O’Neill
.-
11
Writing
the
City
and
Indian
English
Fiction:
Planning,
Violence,
and
Aesthetics
Alex
Tickell
12
Blue
Johannesburg
Pamila
Gupta.-
13
Intervention
II.
Take
Me
There
Selma
Dabbagh
Section
III
Structural
Violence,
Narrative
Structure
.-
14
‘A
Shadow
Class
Condemned
to
Movement’:
Literary
Urban
Imaginings
of
Illegal
Migrant
Lives
in
the
Global
North
Ruvani
Ranasinha
15
‘A
Dagger,
a
Revolver,
a
Bottle
of
Chloroform’:
Colonial
Spy
Fiction,
Revolutionary
Reminiscences
and
Indian
Nationalist
Terrorism
in
Europe Ole
Birk
Laursen.-
16
Detecting
World-Literature:
(Sub-)Urban
Crimes
in
the
Nineteenth
Century
Upamanyu
Pablo
Mukherjee.-
17
Weird
Collocations:
Language
as
Infrastructure
in
the
Storyworlds
of
China
Miéville
Terence
Cave.-
18
Aquacity
Versus
Austerity:
The
Politics
and
Poetics
ofIrish
Water
Michael
Rubenstein.-
19
Intervention
III.
Control
Courttia
Newland.-
20
Afterword
Sarah
Nuttall
Index.
Notă biografică
Elleke
Boehmeris
Professor
of
World
Literature
in
English
at
the
University
of
Oxford,
UK.
She
is
the
author
of
five
monographs
and
five
novels,
including,
among
the
former,Colonial
and
Postcolonial
Literature(1995,
2005),Nelson
Mandela(2008),
andIndian
Arrivals
1870-1915(2015),
and,
among
the
latter,The
Shouting
in
the
Dark(long-listed
Sunday
Times
Barry
Ronge
prize),Screens
against
the
Sky(short-listed
David
Hyam
Prize),
andBloodlines(shortlisted
SANLAM
prize).
She
has
edited
and
co-edited
numerous
books,
including
Robert
Baden-Powell’sScouting
for
Boys(2004).
Dominic
Daviesis
Lecturer
in
English
at
City,
University
of
London,
UK.
He
completed
his
DPhil
and
a
British
Academy
Postdoctoral
Fellowship
at
the
University
of
Oxford.
During
this
time
he
was
also
the
Network
Facilitator
for
the
Leverhulme-funded
'Planned
Violence'
Network
and
the
British
Council
US
and
TORCH-funded
'Divided
Cities'
Network.
He
is
the
author
ofImperial
Infrastructure
and
Spatial
Resistance
in
Colonial
Literature,
1880-1930(2017)
andUrban
Comics:
Infrastructure
and
the
Global
City
in
Contemporary
Graphic
Narratives(forthcoming
2019).
Textul de pe ultima copertă
This
book brings
the
insights
of
social
geographers
and
cultural
historians
into
a
critical
dialogue
with
literary
narratives
of
urban
culture
and
theories
of
literary
cultural
production.
In
so
doing,
it
explores
new
ways
of
conceptualizing
the
relationship
between
urban
planning,
its
often
violent
effects,
and
literature.
Comparing
the
spatial
pasts
and
presents
of
the
post-imperial
and
post/colonial
cities
of
London,
Delhi
and
Johannesburg,
but
also
including
case
studies
of
other
cities,
such
as
Chicago,
Belfast,
Jerusalem
and
Mumbai, Planned
Violence investigates
how
that
iconic
site
of
modernity,
the
colonial
city,
was
imagined
by
its
planners
—
and
how
this
urban
imagination,
and
the
cultural
and
social
interventions
that
arose
in
response
to
it,
made
violence
a
part
of
the
everyday
social
life
of
its
subjects.
Throughout,
however,
the
collection
also
explores
the
extent
to
which
literary
and
cultural
productions
might
actively
resist
infrastructures
of
planned
violence,
and
imagine
alternative
ways
of
inhabiting
post/colonial
city
spaces.
Caracteristici
Takes
a
comparative
literary,
interdisciplinary
approach
that
distinguishes
it
from
most
research
to
date
on
urban
planning
and
post/colonial
violence,
which
tends
to
be
purely
sociologically
or
anthropologically
based
Includes
essays
from
contributors
whose
specialities
range
from
colonial
history
to
postcolonial
geography
Analyses
a
wide
range
of
media,
from
poetry,
fiction
and
theatre/performance
to
graphic
and
visual
cultures
such
as
graffiti
and
comics
art